On Mar 23, 2009, at 7:05 AM, Tom Lane wrote:

Erik Jones <ejo...@engineyard.com> writes:
On Mar 22, 2009, at 9:03 PM, Greenhorn wrote:
How do I use \c (or any other psql commands beginning with a "\") in a
bash script?

For multi-line input to a psql call in a bash (or any decent shell)
script, I'd use a here document:

Or echo/cat the script into psql's stdin, if you prefer that type of
notation. The reason you have to do this is that psql doesn't recognize
backslash commands in a -c string.  There's a school of thought that
doesn't want us to allow multiple commands in a -c string, even.

Hmm... Apparently it does recognize them as long as the backslash is the first character in the command string:

$ psql -c '\d' postgres
No relations found.
$ psql -c ' \d' postgres
ERROR:  syntax error at or near "\"
LINE 1:  \d
         ^

Is that expected behavior?

Erik Jones, Database Administrator
Engine Yard
Support, Scalability, Reliability
866.518.9273 x 260
Location: US/Pacific
IRC: mage2k






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